Virologic and Immunologic Activity of Continued Lamivudine (3TC) vs Delavirdine (DLV) in Combination With Indinavir (IDV) and Zidovudine (ZDV) or Stavudine (d4T) in 3TC-Experienced Subjects
- Conditions
- HIV Infections
- Registration Number
- NCT00000882
- Brief Summary
To compare the proportion of patients in the 2 zidovudine (ZDV)-containing arms who have a plasma HIV RNA concentration below the limit of detection (defined as 500 copies/ml or less) at Weeks 20 and 24 \[AS PER AMENDMENT 8/24/98: HIV RNA concentration below the limit of detection is now defined as 200 copies/ml or less\]. To compare the safety and tolerability of the different treatment regimens. To compare the decrease in plasma HIV-1 RNA and the change in CD4 count from baseline to the average of Weeks 20 and 24 \[AS PER AMENDMENT 12/19/97: and to the average of Weeks 44 and 48; AS PER AMENDMENT 8/24/98: and the average of Weeks 88 and 96\] in the 2 ZDV-containing arms. To study the emergence of resistance to ZDV, lamivudine (3TC), stavudine (d4T), delavirdine (DLV), and indinavir (IDV) in treated patients. To correlate the antiviral and immunologic activity and emergence of drug resistance with pharmacologic parameters of study drugs. To delineate the pharmacokinetic interactions of IDV and DLV. \[AS PER AMENDMENT 12/19/97: To delineate the possible development of cellular resistance to nucleoside analogs and the consequences of switching nucleoside study drugs on intracellular phosphorylation.\] To document rates and patterns of adherence over the course of the study, from day of randomization through 48 weeks. \[AS PER AMENDMENT 8/24/98: To define long-term durability of the virologic activity of the different treatment regimens, as defined by the proportion of patients with plasma HIV-1 RNA levels that remains below the limit of detection. To define long-term tolerability of the different treatment regimens.\] Although a change in reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors is recommended when adding or changing protease inhibitors in a treatment regimen, the choice of available RT inhibitors is often limited by prior exposure, toxicity, or pharmacologic interaction with the protease inhibitors. This study addresses the question of whether to continue 3TC or substitute the nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) DLV when adding IDV to therapy for patients previously treated with ddI or d4T plus 3TC who have greater than 500 copies/ml of plasma HIV-1 RNA. Although the activity of DLV as monotherapy or in combination with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors is of limited duration due to rapid emergence of resistance, it is possible that DLV will contribute significantly to the activity of 3-drug regimens that include a new RT inhibitor plus a protease inhibitor.
- Detailed Description
Although a change in reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors is recommended when adding or changing protease inhibitors in a treatment regimen, the choice of available RT inhibitors is often limited by prior exposure, toxicity, or pharmacologic interaction with the protease inhibitors. This study addresses the question of whether to continue 3TC or substitute the nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) DLV when adding IDV to therapy for patients previously treated with ddI or d4T plus 3TC who have greater than 500 copies/ml of plasma HIV-1 RNA. Although the activity of DLV as monotherapy or in combination with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors is of limited duration due to rapid emergence of resistance, it is possible that DLV will contribute significantly to the activity of 3-drug regimens that include a new RT inhibitor plus a protease inhibitor.
Patients with greater than 500 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml are randomized to 3 treatment arms as follows:
Arm I: d4T + ZDV placebo + DLV + IDV Arm II: ZDV + d4T placebo + 3TC + IDV Arm III: ZDV + d4T placebo + DLV + IDV Treatment on all arms is given for 24 weeks. \[AS PER AMENDMENT 12/19/97: The study is no longer partially blinded, and placebo agents are no longer given; treatment duration is now 48 weeks.\] \[AS PER AMENDMENT 8/24/98: study duration is now 96 weeks.\] Rollover patients from ACTG 306 with greater than 500 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml previously assigned to ZDV/3TC are nonrandomly assigned to Arm I; those previously assigned to ddI/3TC or d4T/3TC are randomized to Arm II or III. Non-rollover patients are randomized to Arm II or III. Rollover patients from ACTG 306 with 500 HIV-1copies/ml or less continue on their previously assigned regimen \[AS PER AMENDMENT 12/19/98: current regimen must be ZDV/3TC, ddI/3TC, or d4T/3TC.\] for the study duration or until an increase occurs. If this increase occurs, patients previously assigned to ZDV/3TC are nonrandomly assigned to Arm I for the remaining study weeks, while those previously assigned to either ddI/3TC or d4T/3TC are randomized to Arm II or III for the remaining study weeks. Patients who received ddI/d4T or ddI/3TC in ACTG 306 are stratified by whether patients received monotherapy or combination therapy during the first 24 weeks \[AS PER AMENDMENT 12/19/97: 48 weeks\]; \[ AS PER AMENDMENT 8/24/98: 96 weeks.\] of ACTG 306.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 300
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (31)
State of MD Div of Corrections / Johns Hopkins Univ Hosp
πΊπΈBaltimore, Maryland, United States
Northwestern Univ Med School
πΊπΈChicago, Illinois, United States
Cook County Hosp
πΊπΈChicago, Illinois, United States
Rush Presbyterian - Saint Luke's Med Ctr
πΊπΈChicago, Illinois, United States
Moses H Cone Memorial Hosp
πΊπΈGreensboro, North Carolina, United States
MetroHealth Med Ctr
πΊπΈCleveland, Ohio, United States
Univ of Rochester Medical Center
πΊπΈRochester, New York, United States
Univ of Puerto Rico
π΅π·San Juan, Puerto Rico
San Mateo AIDS Program / Stanford Univ
πΊπΈStanford, California, United States
Carolinas Med Ctr
πΊπΈCharlotte, North Carolina, United States
Stanford Univ Med Ctr
πΊπΈStanford, California, United States
Santa Clara Valley Med Ctr / AIDS Community Rsch Consortium
πΊπΈSan Jose, California, United States
Louis A Weiss Memorial Hosp
πΊπΈChicago, Illinois, United States
St Louis Regional Hosp / St Louis Regional Med Ctr
πΊπΈSt Louis, Missouri, United States
Johns Hopkins Hosp
πΊπΈBaltimore, Maryland, United States
Beth Israel Med Ctr
πΊπΈNew York, New York, United States
Julio Arroyo
πΊπΈWest Columbia, South Carolina, United States
Ohio State Univ Hosp Clinic
πΊπΈColumbus, Ohio, United States
Univ of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia
πΊπΈPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
SUNY / Erie County Med Ctr at Buffalo
πΊπΈBuffalo, New York, United States
Stanford at Kaiser / Kaiser Permanente Med Ctr
πΊπΈSan Francisco, California, United States
Queens Med Ctr
πΊπΈHonolulu, Hawaii, United States
Univ of North Carolina
πΊπΈChapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Univ of Alabama at Birmingham
πΊπΈBirmingham, Alabama, United States
Univ of California / San Diego Treatment Ctr
πΊπΈSan Diego, California, United States
Univ of Colorado Health Sciences Ctr
πΊπΈDenver, Colorado, United States
Univ of Hawaii
πΊπΈHonolulu, Hawaii, United States
Indiana Univ Hosp
πΊπΈIndianapolis, Indiana, United States
Beth Israel Deaconess - West Campus
πΊπΈBoston, Massachusetts, United States
Univ of Miami School of Medicine
πΊπΈMiami, Florida, United States
Univ of Washington
πΊπΈSeattle, Washington, United States